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Research Articles

The relationship between affective polarization and democratic backsliding: comparative evidence

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Pages 714-735 | Received 04 Apr 2021, Accepted 17 Nov 2021, Published online: 19 Apr 2022

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Read on this site (4)

Alena Macková, Martina Novotná, Lucie Čejková & Lenka Hrbková. (2024) One way or another? Discussion disagreement and attitudinal homogeneity on social networking sites as pathways to polarization in Czechia. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 21:1, pages 54-68.
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Yeilim Cheong & Stephan Haggard. (2023) Political polarization in Korea. Democratization 30:7, pages 1215-1239.
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Antonio Benasaglio Berlucchi & Marisa Kellam. (2023) Who’s to blame for democratic backsliding: populists, presidents or dominant executives?. Democratization 30:5, pages 815-835.
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Mazen Hassan, Engi Amin, Sarah Mansour & Andreas Nicklisch. (2023) Did the Arab Spring generate affective polarization? Experimental evidence from five Arab countries. Democratization 30:4, pages 569-594.
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Articles from other publishers (8)

Sema Akboga, Osman Sahin & Engin Arik. (2023) Polarisation over the meaning of democracy: The case of political parties in Turkey. Politics.
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Didier Caluwaerts, Kamil Bernaerts, Rebekka Kesberg, Lien Smets & Bram Spruyt. (2023) Deliberation and polarization: a multi-disciplinary review. Frontiers in Political Science 5.
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Ivo Bantel. (2023) Camps, not just parties. The dynamic foundations of affective polarization in multi-party systems. Electoral Studies 83, pages 102614.
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Daniel Kreiss & Shannon C McGregor. (2023) A review and provocation: On polarization and platforms. New Media & Society, pages 146144482311618.
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JAMES ADAMS, DAVID BRACKEN, NOAM GIDRON, WILL HORNE, DIANA Z. O’BRIEN & KAITLIN SENK. (2022) Can’t We All Just Get Along? How Women MPs Can Ameliorate Affective Polarization in Western Publics. American Political Science Review 117:1, pages 318-324.
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Neta Oren & Dov Waxman. (2022) "King Bibi" and Israeli Illiberalism: Assessing Democratic Backsliding in Israel during the Second Netanyahu Era (2009–2021). The Middle East Journal 76:3, pages 303-326.
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Jan G. Voelkel, James Chu, Michael N. Stagnaro, Joseph S. Mernyk, Chrystal Redekopp, Sophia L. Pink, James N. Druckman, David G. Rand & Robb Willer. (2022) Interventions reducing affective polarization do not necessarily improve anti-democratic attitudes. Nature Human Behaviour 7:1, pages 55-64.
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Omer Faruk Metin & Pedro Ramaciotti Morales. (2022) Tweeting apart: Democratic backsliding, new party cleavage and changing media ownership in Turkey. Party Politics, pages 135406882211350.
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